2017 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-32
Author(s):  
Theresa Jehn-Dellaport ◽  
Tammi Renninger

A partially defined and largely unexplored confined aquifer in Colorado, Nebraska, and Wyoming is identified regionally through interpretation of geophysical logs, well drilling, coring, petrographic analysis, and GIS interpretation. The aquifer is a fine-grained arkosic sandstone, with thickness ranging up to 1000 ft in some areas. The aquifer represents a significant water resource for ranching and other development in northeastern Colorado and may be a resource for Wyoming, and Nebraska. Nomenclature for this aquifer is suggested. Water wells penetrating the entire aquifer have produced up to 200 gpm. Water quality data is presented including total dissolved solids, boron, and microbial methane.


Clay Minerals ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. A. Barclay ◽  
R. H. Worden

AbstractA reaction path model was constructed in a bid to simulate diagenesis in the Magnus Sandstone, an Upper Jurassic turbidite reservoir in the Northern North Sea, UKCS. The model, involving a flux of source rock-derived CO2 into an arkosic sandstone, successfully reproduced simultaneous dissolution of detrital K-feldspar and growth of authigenic quartz, ankerite and illite. Generation of CO2 occurred before and during the main phase of oil generation linking source rock maturation with patterns of diagenesis in arkosic sandstones and limiting this type of diagenesis to the earlier stages of oil charging. Independent corroborative evidence for the model is provided by formation water geochemical data, carbon isotope data from ankerite and produced gas phase CO2 and the presence of petroleum inclusions within the mineral cements. The model involves a closed system with respect to relatively insoluble species such as SiO2 and Al2O3 but is an open system with respect to CO2. There are up to seven possible rate-controlling steps including: influx of CO2, dissolution of K-feldspar, precipitation of quartz, ankerite and illite, diffusive transport of SiO2 and Al2O3 from the site of dissolution to the site of precipitation and possibly the rate of influx of Mg2+ and Ca2+. Given the large number of possible controls, and contrary to modern popular belief, the rate of quartz precipitation is thus not always rate limiting.


GeoArabia ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 137-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Moujahed I. Al-Husseini

ABSTRACT This paper is the first in a series dedicated to the Phanerozoic Cambrian Period, and Neoproterozoic Ediacaran and Cryogenian periods, as represented in the Middle East Geologic Time Scale (ME GTS, see enclosed Chart). It introduces the term Asfar Sequence to represent a regional Early Cambrian time-rock unit, consisting mainly of continental quartz-rich arkosic sandstone, shale and siltstone, which attain a thickness of at least 750 m in Jordan and more than 700 m in Oman. The term “Asfar”, meaning yellow in Arabic, was chosen because it is the standard color for sandstone in ME GTS. To describe its stratigraphy, four representative formations are reviewed in lexicon format: Salib Arkosic Sandstone of Jordan, Siq Sandstone of Saudi Arabia, Amin Formation of Oman and Lalun Sandstone of Iran. The stratigraphic geometry of the lower boundary of the Sequence varies considerably by locality. In some regions in Iran it is conformable above the shales of the Zaigun Formation. In other regions, such as western Jordan, it is an onlap surface over Proterozoic and/or Lower and Middle Cambrian paleohighs, or a pronounced angular unconformity (e.g. central and southern Saudi Arabia). The paleo-relief represented by the unconformity surface, in many regions, forms a regional peneplain (e.g. central and eastern Jordan) implying erosion; in other paleohigh regions, the Sequence is absent by non-deposition. The age of the base Asfar Sequence is estimated at ca. 530 Ma, based on radiometric data and depositional rates in basinal areas. The top boundary of the Sequence, in Iran, Jordan, and northern and northeastern Saudi Arabia, is represented by a sequence boundary (or its correlative unconformity), above which marine, fine-grained siliciclastics and carbonates of late Early to early Mid-Cambrian age were deposited: Mila Formation in Iran, and Burj Formation in Jordan and Saudi Arabia, implying an age older than ca. 510 Ma in GTS 2004. In Oman, however, continental rather than marine deposition (Miqrat and coeval Mahwis formations) continued above the unconformity in ?Middle Cambrian. For the purpose of regional correlations it is proposed that the Angudan Unconformity of Oman be taken as the name for the basal boundary of the Sequence and the Burj Sequence Boundary for its top.


1963 ◽  
Vol S7-V (1) ◽  
pp. 134-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michel Gomes Silva ◽  
Michel Pacaud ◽  
Francis Wiel

Abstract The Ougarta chain near Beni Abbes in western Algeria is a junction zone of unusual importance in regional stratigraphic correlations. The Ougarta sandstone series, exposed in an anticline from near Zerhamra southeast to Kerzaz, has several discordances within it. Its division into the following seven formations is proposed. The Sebkha el Melah arkosic sandstone, unconformable upon the rhyolite-metamorphic sole, and the overlying An en Nechea quartzite probably are lower Ordovician instead of Cambrian. The five remaining formations, the Foum Tineslem shale, the Kheneg el Aatene quartzitic sandstone, the Foum es Zeidiya shale, sandstone, and lenticular sandy limestone, the Bou M'Haoud ferruginous sandstone and shale, and the Djebel Serraf conglomerate, shale, and sandstone contain lower Ordovician faunas.


1956 ◽  
Vol S6-VI (1-3) ◽  
pp. 3-11
Author(s):  
Alfredo Riedel

Abstract The numerous and varied facies in the "Schisto-calcaire" and the "Schisto-greseux" series in the Loukouni and Djoue river basins in the Niari region, French Equatorial Africa, are analyzed and the broad regional stages established. The Schisto-calcaire (mainly more or less magnesian limestones and marls) is divided into six stages representing transition from deposition in an epineritic shelf environment toward calcareous sedimentation in shallow water. Correlations can be drawn with similar beds in the Belgian Congo. The Schisto- greseux (mainly arkosic sandstone) is divided into the M'Pioka and Inkisi series. The series are characterized by relatively uniform facies which indicate deposition in a transitional (fluvial-lagoonal-littoral) environment within an intracratonic basin.


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